I so enjoyed this book. The author put down the random thoughts that run through his head while life goes on. Not everyone I know will like this book. I enjoyed his book The Circle. This book is a memoir.

The best first chunk about a dying parent. The pace of the book is frenetic. It's all in the narrator's head and his pace is like being in a hamster wheel. There are long, long paragraphs of internal monologue and description and then lots of dialogue that's not tagged (some of it imagined) for other parts of the story. I liked the mix of long paragraphs and short, short dialogue and the pace. Occasionally I became bogged down in the long paragraphs and had to stop reading the book for a while, but it reaches out and grabs you and brings you back. Very glad to have read it; also very glad to be done with such a long, long book. It's also interesting b/c it's memoir, but so much of it is the narrator's internal thoughts/made up thoughts. It's line crossing.

I made the mistake of reading most of this book around the time my Grandfather passed away and it's not that the book is incredibly depressing, it just that it was JUST depressing enough to not make me feel better about my own situation. That being said, it's sort of a stream of consciousness novel, which I'm normally not a fan of, but in this case I think it worked perfectly. I don't know how much of it is true and how much is fabricated, but I found it interesting, even if it just sort of ended. I don't know. I probably should re-read it at some point because I really liked the style, I think the content was just a bit much for that particular moment.

This book made me feel like I had interesting stories to tell. It got me excited about everyday life.

This probably wasn't the right book to have been reading these last few weeks. Having a newborn at home right now means exhaustion and lack of patience with self aware naval gazing and stream of consciousness flights of fancy where not much really happens.

Which is a shame as I think there is a lot to like buried here. Like the honest and affecting opening chapter and the moments where his enormity at being responsible for his younger sibling sinks in and repeatedly screws with his head. I liked those bits a lot. The rest? Not so much.

I saw it through to the bitter end and even read the appendix, flipping the book round and squinting to read the very small type. There is humour and I appreciate what he attempted but it just wasn't quite right for me. Still, I can see this will have fans and that's good.
emotional funny fast-paced
funny slow-paced

This book was recommended by William Zinsser as a prime example of making the most of the memoir format. His other recommendation (Growing Up by Russell Baker) was an absolute delight to read. Not so Eggers. 

I think Eggers has excellent command of language. Like Baker, he can elevate mundane affairs with nothing more than clever use of English. Consider, for example, this corny bit of jealousy he feels when losing a TV spot to a guy named Judd, only to later end up a cameo on Judd's show:

"At the same time, it would also be nice to make clear the mistake Laura Folger has made, to have our cameo make clear who the real stars are, stars who far outshine this dowdy Judd person—we the brilliant ringed planets, he just a tiny, cold moon."

But these bouts of brilliance are unfortunately overshadowed by the tedious self-conscious ranting of a guy in his 20s. At first it starts out all charming and self-deprecating. Oh ha-ha, he's self-centered *and* self-aware, that's soo ironic. But over 500 pages, these charming quirks get old. Even the cute little doom-and-gloom tangents he goes off on grow tiresome eventually. And at some point you begin to believe that this guy is actually the very same egotistical asshole he claims to mock. Fabricating an interview with himself midway through the book is what did it for me. 

I still made it to the end, and it does pick up after "Laura Folger's interview", but I would not have been much worse off if I'd never begun.
challenging dark emotional funny hopeful reflective sad medium-paced
medium-paced

ellenmm's review against another edition

DID NOT FINISH: 28%

Beginning to get tedious and the relationships seemed over the top with the Dave Eggers character larger than life and bigger, wiser, and more important than the rest— yawn.